Fires swept more than 4,500 hectares (ha)–or 1.3 times the size of Shimla city–of forest in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh since April 7, 2016. This is 40 per cent more than the 3,185 ha burnt in Uttarakhand since February 2, 2016, IndiaSpend reported on May 11, 2016.
“Winter rains are very crucial. Although the reasons cannot just be attributed to climate change, a long dry summer is a factor. Overall warming due to climate variability enhances changes of fires,” Krishnaswamy said.
During 1990-2011, the worst wildfires occurred in Uttarakhand in 1995, when 375,000 ha were burnt, followed by the Ganga-Yamuna watershed area (1999, 80,000 ha), Himachal Pradesh (2010, 19,109 ha), and two fires in Maharashtra in 2008 and 2010 that affected some 10,000 ha, the 2012 report said.